Tag Archive for 'nathan lane'

At the Cinema | Astro Boy - Cartoon hero zips into action with all-guns blazing - including those in his butt!

Astro Boy - Brilliant schoolboy Toby  (Freddie Highmore) lives on as Astro Boy in this lively animated comedy adventure

Created in 1951, Japanese comic-book hero Astro Boy has been a TV cartoon staple for decades, both in black-and-white and colour. Now he gets a CGI-animation reboot in this lively sci-fi comedy adventure featuring a starry voice cast that ranges from Hollywood heavyweights Nicolas Cage and Donald Sutherland to Brit cult faves Bill Nighy and Matt Lucas.

With nods to Pinocchio via A.I. Artificial Intelligence and Wall·E, the story takes place in futuristic Metro City, a floating island utopia that hovers above a junk-choked Earth. There, grief-stricken scientist Dr Tenma (Cage) creates a robot boy after his son Toby (Freddie Highmore) is killed.

Astro Boy - Scientist’s son Toby (Freddie Highmore) is reborn as Astro Boy in this lively animated comedy adventure

Programmed with Toby’s memories, Astro Boy has super powers, including the ability to fly and (much to his delight) to fire machine guns out of his butt. But Metro City’s war-mongering leader, President Stone (Sutherland), wants to get his hands on Astro so he can harness his unique energy source for military ends.

Astro seeks refuge on Earth, where he hooks up with a gang of scavenging children who think he is a real boy. After a series of scrapes, including a run-in with a trio of dim, would-be robot revolutionaries and Nathan Lane’s Fagin-like impresario Hamegg, Astro Boy pulls through and fulfils his destiny.

Astro Boy isn’t in the Pixar league, but the movie has its heart in the right place with its pro-eco, anti-war message, the action is energetic and it’s fun trying to work out who in the eclectic cast provides which voice.

On general release from 5th February. 


To activate the sound in the trailer: hold your cursor over the screen to reveal the control panel and click on the volume control in the bottom right-hand corner.

Does Colin Firth have a point about the plight of gay actors?

Earlier this week A Single Man star and Oscar nominee Colin Firth voiced some long overdue statements about the problem that exists for gay actors in Hollywood. Click here for the full news story.

A SINGLE MAN, COLIN FIRTH

“If you’re known as a straight guy playing a gay role, you get rewarded for that,” he says. “If you’re a gay man and you want to play a straight role, you don’t get cast - and if a gay man wants to play a gay role now, you don’t get cast.”

It’s true. How many big name ‘out’ Hollywood actors can you think of? There are one or two Brits who’ve crossed over into LaLa land (Alan Cumming, Rupert Everett, Ian McKellen, Stephen Fry, Simon Callow), but of the Americans I can think of no big name male actors (the women are few and far between too. With the exception of Cynthia Nixon, they’ve all stopped making movies). So yes, Mr Firth is right, if you’re an out gay man and you want to play ‘a gay role or a ’straight role’, you don’t get cast.

A SINGLE MAN, COLIN FIRTH

Which brings me to my next question - how many mainstream movies can you think of that actually have central gay roles?

Think about it - I’m not talking about those gay characters that pepper the periphery of the action like Julia Roberts’s gay friend (Rupert Everett) in My Best Friend’s Wedding, Hugh Grant’s boisterous pal (Simon Callow) in Four Weddings and a Funeral, or Meryl Streep’s former sweetheart (Colin Firth) in Mamma Mia! No, I’m talking about films with central characters who are gay.

It’s difficult, but I’ve thought long and hard and here is my list of all the mainstream films I can think of featuring central characters who are gay. Its brevity is alarming.

So let’s see if Firth is right. How many of these gay characters are played by ‘out’ gay actors?

Brokeback Mountain: Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal - not gay

Milk: Sean Penn - not gay

A Single Man: Colin Firth - not gay

Capote: Philip Seymour Hoffman - not gay

Infamous: Toby Jones - not gay

Imagine Me and You: Piper Perabo, Lena Headey - not gay

The Birdcage: Robin Williams - not gay. Nathan Lane - yes, he’s gay!

The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert: Terence Stamp, Guy Pearce, Hugo Weaving - none are gay

To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie NewmarPatrick Swayze, Wesley Snipes, John Leguizamo - not gay

Wilde: Stephen Fry - yes gay, Jude Law - no, not gay

Far From Heaven: Dennis Quaid - not gay

Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil: Kevin Spacey - not gay, he says.

Philadelphia: Tom Hanks - not gay

Maurice: Hugh GrantJames Wilby - not gay

Food for thought eh?

If you’re prepared to stay up into the early hours then you can catch The Adventures of Priscilla Queen of the Desert at 1.15am tonight (3rd Feb) on TCM

Or you could stay up even later tomorrow night to watch  To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar at 4am on Sky  Screen 1 HD

Click here to check out more film news.

The Best view - Swing Vote

Swing Vote - Kevin Costner & Madeline Carroll

With the American presidential race getting scarier by the day, surely only the savage iconoclasm of Hunter S Thompson could do justice to the election’s madness and mendacity. Just imagine the ferocious spleen the author of Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail ’72 (his account of that year’s Nixon-McGovern contest) would have unleashed on god-fearing, moose-hunting, hockey mom Sarah Palin, aka “Caribou Barbie”.

In the absence of the great Gonzo journalist, who you will recall blew his brains out with a .44 calibre pistol in 2005, it appears we will have to make do with Swing Vote, a good-natured and mildly satirical comedy from little known writer-director Joshua Michael Stern, maker of 2005’s Neverwas (Neverwhat?).

Stern’s movie stars Kevin Costner as a loveable loser named Bud Johnson, a boozy slacker who lives with his precocious 12-year-old daughter Molly (played by the equally precocious Madeline Carroll) in a battered trailer in the town of Texico, New Mexico (which sounds made up but does in fact exist). Bud has promised the civic-minded Molly that he will vote in the upcoming presidential election but passes out drunk in his truck instead.

Swing Vote

A series of contrivances then unfold, with the outcome that the entire election hinges on Bud’s un-cast vote. As a result, the media descends on Bud’s home, and so do Republican incumbent Andrew Boone (Kelsey Grammer) and Democrat challenger Donald Greenleaf (Dennis Hopper). In the days that follow, as swarms of reporters hustle for a scoop, Boone and Greenleaf, and their slippery campaign managers (Stanley Tucci and Nathan Lane), bend themselves out of shape in an effort to sway Bud’s decision.

A series of hilarious spoof campaign ads show the consequences. Bud babbles a half-baked thought; the politicians pounce on it; and end up flip-flopping their most deeply held values. So Republican Boone comes out in favour of gay marriage and ecological preservation, while liberal Democrat Greenleaf starts making anti-abortion and anti-immigration pronouncements.

In the end, though, the movie is too frightened of alienating half its audience to take sides; so cautious about offending either the Red states or the Blue states that it sits on the fence. (Can a political satire be apolitical?) A bruising scene involving Mare Winningham as Molly’s estranged mother hints at the true desperation of America’s “working poor”, as Molly accurately describes Bud, but overall the movie prefers to aim for a mood of Capraesque uplift. Ultimately, Swing Vote, like Costner’s protagonist, is too benign to go for the jugular and settles instead for tickling us gently in the ribs.